"DISTRICT NURSE"
PUBLISHED BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT. COPYRIGHT.
BY
FAITH BALDWIN.
CHAPTER XXlV.—(Continued.)
Her mother came out of the bedroom. She asked brightly, “Have you invited Mr Bartlett .. ?” She stopped and looked around. She stated, with blank astonishment, “Why, he’s gone!’’ “Yes, he's gone,” said Ellen dully.
‘Did you ask him for Christmas?" No, she had not asked him, Ellen told her; she had forgotten. She walked past her moi«ier and Coral and into the larger bedroom. She shut the doo_r. Nancy was out. She was alone, in the familiar room. She lay down on the bed, her hands clasped behind her head. If she could cry, she thought, she would feel better.
That chapter was closed. Gladys and Nelson, who had wanted to be a big shot . . . and Frank. But life went on. Christmas came and went. There were flowers from Frank; a brief friendly card. He would be South, he wrote, with friend. That was all. Flowers fade. Jim came with his aunt in the evening to see the tree. He had gifts for them all. There was perfume for Nancy and Coral; there was a lavender shawl for Mrs Adams. “Am I such an old woman?” she asked with amusement; “but thank you, Jimmy, it is lovely.” It was, they assured her, and so becoming. There was also a ring . . . for Ellen.
He’d given her other things. Now, he took the little box from-his pocket. They were standing alone together, by the lighted tree; the windows with their wreaths of green gave back a reflection, green and red and white . . . “If you’d wear it . . ?” he asked. But she shook her head. No, she would not wear it. He should not have bought it. “It will keep,” he said, as cheerfully as he could, and put it back in his pocket. “It will have to keep. You’ll like it, some day.”
She thought. No. She thought, it might be easier to give in, he loves me. I’m really fond of him, he’s cared for me all these years; every one would be happy about it, especially mother; it might be easier to surrender, to take second best . . But she knew she wouldn’t. She had something to sustain her, after all. She had her work. That mattered, most. It would have to matter most now. She’d make it matter. Christmas was over. The breadlines increased. The lines before the registry offices waited patiently, in sleet and snow and rain, hour by hour. There were appeals, there ware speeches, there was misery, there was suffering. This was an enormous country; it was a rich country. But the suffering went on. There were babies barely able to walk, dragging home crude wagons filled with sticks of wood. There were ambulances at people’s doors, stretchers, neighbours saying, pneumonia .. ? Pete was desperate, overworked. “There isn’t,” he said on his rare hours off, “any end to this, the sickness from worry, from fear, from undernourishment . . .” Ellen went into unheated rooms, the families huddled together; into houses where a single oil stove smoked. Ellen reported worthy cases to the gas company. The gas company saw that their service was not discontinued.’ Ellen tramped to the charity bureaus; Ellen reported cases, not of disease, but of starvation, which is worse than a disease. It was a New Year. It would be a better year, they said. She saw courage, in the bleeding raw. She saw a seventeen-year-old girl supporting a jobless father and brother, and a mother on $l6 a week. She saw her, half delirious, lying on the bed she shared with her mother. “I’ve gotta go to work, I’ve gotta.” Ellen saw a family die. leaving two; a girl of 19, a boy of 12. “I have to look after the kid,” said the girl, coughing. "I can't afford to stay out, sick.” All this and more. If she saw misery, if she saw tragedy, she saw gallantry. She saw the will to carry on, she saw the sacrifice and the stubbornness and the amazing fortitude of the human heart . . .
She thought, what can I do. what can a thousand like me do. with our two hands apiece and our few hours in a day? Not much, but it counted, it had to count. Every life saved, every job found, every family encouraged, every child given the treatment ho or she needed, every lesson taught. It all counted. She thought of herself, for the first time, as an unknown soldier in a small army, an army that wouldn’t
. . . that couldn’t give up, an army whose battles were unceasing, who had to go on . .
‘‘You’re killing yourself.” said Pete. “Not me,” said Ellen and laughed at him.
And then, one night, a ring at the door bell. She was alone with her mother. She went to the door, £ick with hope, with fear that her hope was unfounded.
A very bitter night. And Bill, standtherc, pulling oil his cap with the warm ear-tabs; Bill in the horsehide coat and the sweater and the sturdy, scuffed shoes and woollen sox.
“It’s me,” said Bill. “Say, Mis' Ellen, the baby’s awful sick, and Ma can’t get a doctor. I thought maybe- —”
Mrs Adams asked, “Why didn't you telephone the office, Bill?” “It only just happened,” explained Bill, “and I sez to my old—l mean, my Ma, I says, Mis’ Ellen’ll come. He's chokin’,” said Bill simply. Ellen went to the 'phone and called Dr Travers. He was out. She left an urgent message for him, and got on her things. It was something of a walk to Bill’s, so they took a cab at the corner. “Tills is a swell cab, said Bill politely, “but it ain’t as nice as Frank’s . . ”
They reached Bill’s house; he lived up three flights, in fairly large, fairly
(To be Continued.)
comfortable rooms. His mother, as red-headed as Bill, had the baby in her arms.
“It's —his throat —she said. “Croup like, but I never seen it so bad. no, not when Bill had it. when he was little."
Ellen looked at the baby. There were things to do and do fast. The first thing was to get Bill away, to isolate the gasping, choking child as soon as possible: to give an emetic; to improvise a croup kettle: td make, compresses . . If it were, membranous croup — She .worked rapidly, surely. The baby's mother helped her; not a woman to go to pieces, Mrs Maloney. Bill and his father and Bill’s little sister were banished. The tea-kettle steamed. There were certain remedies in Ellen’s black bag. If only Dr Travers would hurry . . . Nov/ and then Ellen asked a question. No, the baby hadn’t had diphtheria. Yes, Bill had had it, and the little girl, several years before . . .
The funny little tike with the topknot of red hair was breathing a little more easily now. “God and His saints be praised,” said Mrs Maloney. Ellen echoed her, silently, as she heard the heavy quick steps on the stairs . . . It was membranous croup. She had done what she could; she had been prepared to do more if necessary, if Travers hadn't come. But he did come. And Mrs Maloney held the lamp steady while he and Ellen did the things that were urgent and swift and delicate and sure. And presently the little boy slept . .
And a long time afterwards, when directions had been left, and a nurse called, and everything attended to. Travers drove her home. “Never had a better assistant," Travers praised her. She was desperately tired; and yet her heart was very light. It was all so terribly worth while, no matter how tired you were, how 1 discouraged, no matter if the hours came when it seemed a Herculean task, no end to it, no proper beginning, and not 'much progress. Travers was talking about Pete, “He’s the man for the job,” he said “I had hopes of Mel . . but Mel’s different. Pete knows these people, he loves, them in his hard-boiled way, we’re going to have a grand go on with it. That means a lot. He’ll never be rich, I suppose,” said Travers, with a chuckle, “but boy, he’ll be rewarded! He won't realise that till he's as old as I am.”
Ellen went into the apartment. Her mother had made up the bed for her. “Don’t come near me,” said Ellen, “I’ve scrubbed up as best I can, but it wasn’t enough.”
She took off her clothes, dropped them in a solution, bathed herself, scrubbed, washed her hair. “Ellen,” said her mother, “you’ll never got to bed ...”
“There’s the electric heater,” said Ellen yawning, “I’ll forego the luxury of hand-drying it, for once." And the very next night, Bill came again.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19390128.2.84
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Wairarapa Times-Age, 28 January 1939, Page 10
Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,454"DISTRICT NURSE" Wairarapa Times-Age, 28 January 1939, Page 10
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Wairarapa Times-Age. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.